12 XLVIII. MYRTACED. [ Darwinia. 
lobes narrow-ovate, enisi the meth of the petals. Petals about 1 line 
long, rather narrow, concave, with a deep-coloured spot at the tip. Stami- 
nodia linear-lanceolate, Oé elei by 3 to 5 prominent tubercular glands, 
Style bearded towards the end as in the other species, but the hairs very 
deciduous.—Hedaroma thymoides, Lindl. Swan Riv. App. 7; Genetyllis thy- 
moides, Se Myrt. Xeroc. 33; Darwinia brevistyla, Lures. in Bull. Mose. 
1847, i 
WW. A pec Swan River, Drummond, lst Coll., also n. 53 and 149, 8rd Coll. n. 
23, 4th Coll. n. 42. 
D. taxifolia, 4. Cunn. in Field N. 8. Wales, 352. A straggling or 
Ee shrub, or when luxuriant almost arborescent. Leaves mostly oppo- 
Wé linear-falcate, triquetrous or laterally compressed, acute, 2 to 4 in., or in 
t ce all above 3 in. long Agr Leger the floral ones 
exceeding the Solis Bracteoles brodd, Mucius as long as the flowers. 
Calyx 23 lines long, qgemineniie 5- ribbed, the adnate part slightly rugose 
between the ribs; lobes very small and scale-like. Petals ovate, i line long 
or rather more. Staminodia very small and subulate. —D, laxifolia, Schau. 
Myrt. Xeroc. 38. 
N. S. Wal Rocky declivities of the Blue Mountains, A. Cunningham. Moist 
sandy heaths Sales eee and South Head, R. Brown. 
Var. meu asd lyx fully 3 lines eg the lobes nearly half as long as the petals. — 
eràü. P. Mue 
Schauer was mistaken in ees un that A. Cunningham's specifie name of taxifolia was 
a misprint; it was intended to allude to the peculiar bifarious arrangement of the leaves in 
luxuriant branches 
14. D. istit; Benth. in Journ. Linn. Soc. ix. 180. Erect, bushy, | 
with short and rigid or long and virgate branches. See scattered, mostly 
x 
part 5-ribbed, otherwise smooth, the free part obscurely 10-ribbed ; lobes 
very small and scale-like. Petals white, above 1 line long. Staminodia subu- 
late, rather longer than the filaments. Style not twice as long as the petals. 
— Genetyllis are Seng in Huez. Enum. 47 ; Schau. Myrt. Xeroc. 30; 
wis in Pl. Pre 
dr ai T ng igos Sound, Bazter, Hue — and others; eastward to Gg 
t Grand, Maxwell; and thence to Swan Riv ver, Preis, 433 ; Drummond, Ath Coll. n 
. 161, 5th "Coll. n, 103; Cape Naturaliste, Oldfield. 
D. pauciflora, Benth. in Journ. Linn: Soc. ix. 180. s pperenty tall ` 
15. 
and bushy, with numerous short branches. Leaves scattered, erect or spread- 
ing, obovate or oblong, very obtuse, 1 to 2 lines long, imbriçate on the adr 
MN concave above, convex underneath, but [rer keeled, usually 
similar. F 
GE 
